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SHORT COMMUNICATION

The Effect of Oil Layers on the Hydrocarbon Emissions from Spark-Ignited Engines

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Pages 69-73 | Received 28 Aug 1981, Accepted 30 Oct 1981, Published online: 10 May 2007
 

Abstract

Measured amounts of oil were added to the engine cylinder of a single-cylinder CFR engine to determine the effect of oil layers on exhaust hydrocarbon emissions. The exhaust hydrocarbon concentration increased in proportion to the amount of oil added when the engine was fueled on isooctane. Addition of 0·6 cm3 of oil produced an increase of 1000 ppmC in exhaust hydrocarbon emissions at a coolant temperature of 320°K. Gas chromatographic analysis of the exhaust determined that fuel and fuel oxidation species, not oil oxidation products, were responsible for most of the increase. Similar experiments performed with propane fuel showed no increase in exhaust emissions when oil was added to the cylinder. These measurements have determined that the increase in tailpipe hydrocarbon concentration consists of fuel related species and is proportional to both the amount of oil added and the solubility of the fuel in the oil. Thus, we believe that the principal source of this increase in exhaust hydrocarbon concentration is the dissolving of fuel in the oil layer during compression with subsequent release into cooling burned gas during the expansion stroke.

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